Ex Im Bank Backed Satellite Export to Luxembourg Will Provide Broadcast Services to Mexico Create Hundreds of New U S Jobs
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Export-Import Bank of the United States has approved a $171.5 million direct loan to support the export of a Ku-band broadcast satellite by Space Systems/Loral (SS/L) of Palo Alto, Calif., to SES S.A. of Chateau de Betzdorf, Luxembourg. Financing from Ex-Im Bank helps enable our customers to move forward with their vision of extending communications infrastructure around the world, said John Celli, president of Space Systems/Loral. It means hundreds of new jobs at our Palo Alto, Calif. manufacturing facility. |
| ||
| SES will lease the entire capacity of the 32-transponder QuetzSat-1 satellite to a subsidiary of EchoStar Corporation, which in turn is expected to provide direct-to-home broadcast satellite TV services for the ultimate end-user, Dish Mexico. It is further expected that EchoStar will provide capacity on QuetzSat-1 to DISH Network Corporation for use in connection with its U.S. DTH business. Celli said the ability to provide Ex-Im Bank credit helps us better compete against large government-supported overseas manufacturers that vie for the same business. He said SS/L is one of the only large international aerospace companies that does not rely on government contracts for its business. Financing high-technology American exports promotes communications infrastructure growth in dynamic markets like Mexico, said Ex-Im Bank Chairman and President Fred P. Hochberg. This export also opens up potential follow-on business for U.S. exporters, and helps create and maintain U.S. jobs. It is Ex-Im Bank's first transaction with SES, a leading fixed satellite service provider with a global fleet of 44 satellites reaching 99 percent of the world's population. The QuetzSat-1 satellite also could provide services to Central America, the Caribbean and the continental United States if needed. Ex-Im Bank, an independent, self-sustaining federal agency, helps create and maintain U.S. jobs by filling gaps in export financing and strengthening U.S. export competitiveness. | ||
In fiscal year 2010, the Bank posted its second consecutive record-breaking year, including preliminary figures of $24.5 billion in export financing, which supported $34.4 billion worth of American exports and 227,000 American jobs at more than 3,300 U.S. companies. Of these authorizations, more than $5 billion was for small businesses - another record for the Bank. |